I’m going to say something that might sting a little.
Your photography is probably good enough to charge twice what you’re charging right now.
I know that sounds like a generic pep talk, but I mean it. I talk to photographers every single week who have gorgeous work — the kind of images that make me stop scrolling — and they’re stuck at $2–3K weddings wondering what they’re doing wrong.
They think they need a better camera. A new editing style. More workshops. More Instagram followers.
They don’t.
They need to fix their portfolio.
Not the quality of the images in it. The strategy behind it.

Here’s the thing most photographers get wrong: they treat their portfolio like a greatest hits album. Best images from every wedding, organized by how pretty they are.
But that’s not what a portfolio is supposed to do.
Your portfolio is a filter. It’s the thing that decides who contacts you and who keeps scrolling. Every single image is either attracting your ideal client, repelling the wrong ones, or just taking up space.
When a couple lands on your website, they’re not admiring your composition. They’re asking one question: “Is this photographer for someone like me?”
If your portfolio shows a little bit of everything — backyard weddings, ballroom weddings, rustic barns, modern lofts, elopements, 300-person receptions — the answer to that question is unclear. And when the answer is unclear, premium clients move on. They don’t take a chance on “maybe.” They book the photographer whose portfolio screams “this is exactly what we want.”
Budget clients, on the other hand, are less selective. They’ll reach out to anyone whose work looks decent and whose prices are low enough. So if your portfolio is sending mixed signals, guess who’s filling your inbox?
That’s not a talent problem. It’s a curation problem.
I see the same three mistakes constantly. And once you know what to look for, you can’t unsee them.
You’re posting every wedding you shoot. Not every wedding belongs in your portfolio. I know that feels harsh — especially when you worked hard on a wedding and the photos turned out beautifully. But if it doesn’t represent the type of client you want more of, it doesn’t belong. A gorgeous backyard wedding with DIY decor is still going to attract more backyard-wedding-budget clients. If you want to book $5K+ weddings at high-end venues, your portfolio needs to show that.
Your editing is inconsistent. Warm and moody one post. Bright and airy the next. Film-inspired today, clean and classic tomorrow. I get it — you’re evolving as an artist. But your ideal client can’t tell what they’d actually get if they hired you. Premium couples are investing thousands of dollars. They need to know exactly what the end product looks like. Consistency signals professionalism. Inconsistency signals uncertainty.
You’re showing where you’ve been, not where you’re going. That wedding from three years ago that you’re still so proud of? If it doesn’t match your current style, it’s confusing your message. Old work that doesn’t align with the direction you’re heading is actively working against you. Archive it. It served its purpose. Now it’s time to show the work that represents the photographer you are today and the clients you want tomorrow.

I started paying attention to this when things finally shifted. I’d invested over $20K in mentors, a masterclass, and editorials to break into new markets. But it wasn’t until I spent 2024 actually applying everything I learned — rebuilding my portfolio from scratch, rebranding, restructuring my packages — that things clicked. By 2025, I was booking $7–8K weddings, photo only. And my clients weren’t choosing me because of one incredible photo. They were choosing me because of a feeling they got when they looked at my portfolio as a whole.
Here’s what $5K+ couples are actually evaluating when they land on your website:
Consistency. Not just in editing, but in the overall vibe. Does every image feel like it belongs together? Does the portfolio tell a cohesive story about who you are as a photographer?
Venues that match their budget. This one is huge. If your dream client is getting married at a luxury vineyard, but your portfolio is full of community centers and public parks, they’re not going to see themselves in your work. The venues in your portfolio signal the budget level you work at.
A style they can picture themselves in. Premium clients want to look at your portfolio and immediately imagine their own wedding day in your photos. The couple, the details, the atmosphere — it should feel like a preview of what their experience would be like.
Professionalism. Not in a stuffy way. Just in the sense that everything feels intentional. The images are curated, not dumped. The layout is clean. The overall impression is “this photographer has their act together.”
When I asked my own $7K+ clients what made them choose us, not a single one said “your Instagram.” They said things like “your portfolio was exactly what we were looking for” and “our planner recommended you” and “everything felt so organized and professional.”
Your portfolio did the selling before I ever got on a phone call.

Here’s a quick exercise you can do right now. Seriously — pull up your website.
Look at the first 6 images a visitor would see. Then ask yourself these three questions:
1. Would my dream client get married at these venues? If you want to book luxury weddings but your first 6 images show budget venues, you have a mismatch. Your portfolio is attracting the wrong people before they even read your About page.
2. Do the budgets of these weddings match what I want to charge? If you’re showing $15K-budget weddings but want to charge $5K+ for photography alone, the clients seeing those images don’t have the budget for you. Show weddings where the overall budget aligns with clients who can afford your pricing.
3. Would my ideal couple see themselves in these photos? This is the big one. When a couple lands on your site, they should immediately feel like your portfolio was made for someone like them. If the answer is “not really” — your portfolio is filtering out the exact people you want to attract.
If you answered “no” to any of those questions, your portfolio is currently working against you. Not because the photos are bad — but because they’re telling the wrong story about who you serve.

Okay, so you’ve identified the problem. Now what?
Start removing. This is the hardest part. Go through your portfolio and remove any wedding that doesn’t represent the type of client you want more of. Even if the photos are beautiful. Even if it was your favorite wedding to shoot. If it doesn’t match where you’re going, it’s taking up space that could be filled with something that does.
When I did this during my 2024 rebrand, I removed about 70% of my portfolio. That felt terrifying. But within months, the quality of my inquiries completely changed. Higher budgets. Better venues. Couples who said yes without negotiating.
Make your editing consistent. Pick a direction and commit to it. Every visible image on your website and Instagram should feel like it belongs in the same collection. If you have older work that doesn’t match your current editing style, remove it or re-edit it.
Only add new work that matches where you’re going. Every time you shoot a wedding, ask yourself: does this represent the clients I want more of? If yes, add it to your portfolio. If no — deliver the gallery beautifully to your client, but don’t feature it in your marketing. Not every great wedding is a portfolio wedding.
Think about the story your first 6 images tell. Those first 6 images are your first impression. They should represent your best venues, your most ideal clients, and your most consistent editing. Curate them intentionally — don’t just arrange them chronologically.

I’ll leave you with this, because it’s the thing I wish someone had told me years ago.
The difference between $3K and $6K wedding photographers is usually not the quality of their work.
I’ve seen photographers charging $3K with absolutely stunning portfolios. And photographers charging $6K with similar skill levels.
The difference is positioning.
$6K photographers show work that attracts higher-budget clients. They have messaging that speaks to couples who value premium experiences. They curate intentionally instead of showing everything. Many of them — like me — invested in learning the business side and then did the hard work of applying it. The education mattered. But the positioning is what made it pay off.
It’s not about being “better.” It’s about positioning yourself for the clients who already want what you offer — and are willing to invest in it.
Your work might already be worth more than you’re charging. Your positioning just needs to catch up.
If you’re reading this and thinking “okay, I know my portfolio needs work but I don’t know where to start” — I made something for you.
My free Portfolio Audit Checklist walks you through evaluating your current portfolio step by step. You’ll figure out which images are attracting premium clients and which ones are working against you.
Download the free Portfolio Audit Checklist here →
And if you want the full deep-dive framework — not just the audit but the complete curation and positioning strategy — the Portfolio Glow-Up Kit is $37 and walks you through everything. It’s the exact process I used to go from posting everything to booking $7–8K weddings with a curated, intentional portfolio.
Grab the Portfolio Glow-Up Kit ($37) →
Your work is good. Your positioning is the problem. And that’s the best news — because positioning is fixable.
February 10, 2026
@2026 copyrighted | brittany mina
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